Dear UsersSport-heute.ch closes its gates. After 11 years I would like to realize other projects, go on journeys and finally enjoy life to the fullest. There were 11 wonderful years with you. Sport-heute.ch will continue to exist as a picture book for at least the next few years. But every farewell can also be a new beginning. Now it is final. I wish you a good time. I would like to thank the readership and your honest enthusiasm with great gratitude. Thank you for spoiling you for 11 years.

Chess and goodbye.

youMarcel Krebs

Anyone who wants to stay in touch with me and Sämi can do so through my personal blog.www.marcelkrebs.ch.

Charging On Alone

Geschrieben von Marie Le Berrigaud Perochon am 11. Februar 2015.

With their long time rivals Neutrogena (Guillermo Alatadill and José Munoz), now heading to make a short pit stop in the south of New Zealand to repair their engine starter motor, Barcelona World Race leaders, Cheminées Poujoulat are left on their own in the Pacific.

In fact Stamm and Le Cam sailed their highest 24 hours run of the race yet to 1230hrs UTC this afternoon at 482.5 NM.But the sudden feeling of fighting on alone has hit long time pace makers Bernard Stamm and Jean Le Cam, neither of whom are strangers to such mechanical failures. Indeed they were quick to empathise with their challengers' enforced pit stop.

Neutrogena announced early this morning that they were diverting to Invercargill in the very south of New Zealand, 540 miles to their NE , after they could no longer get their engine to start. Unable to put power in their batteries using their primary charging source, the prudent decision was taken to head for a pit stop to replace the faulty part.

The Neutrogena team plan to take full advantage of the technical stop, a mandatory minimum of 24 hours, to ensure the IMOCA 60, leaves ready to take on the second half of the 23,455 mile course in 100% A1 shape.

Skipper Guillermo Altadill estimated it would take them 40 hours to reach the haven. Accordingly, 5 West, the English based team which manages the Neutrogena programme for this race, has put together a small technical team which will be on the dockside to meet Altadill and Munoz. A technical specialist was reported to be leaving the UK this Wednesday evening armed with the appropriate spares.

5 West's director Stewart Hosford emphasized:"This is precautionary and we feel the safest course of action for Guillermo and Jose."

On a satellite call this morning Altadill explained:"In the beginning I was thinking of stopping in one of the islands, Campbell Island maybe or Auckland, but they are uninhabited islands with nothing there. So the best place to go is South Island, New Zealand. That is where we are going" We dont have the battery system charging at all and so just now we are using the hydro-generators just to maintain the battery system and to make water and to keep the electronics on. The only problem now is that the conditions are getting worse and worse, with a big sea state, and more wind. So we cannot use the hydros. So we have to economise for the next 40 hours. We have to hand steer and not use the electronics. We have made enough water to get to the south of New Zealand. "

Although they have a hydrogenerator system to charge their batteries in the rough, high speed conditions of the Pacific it is regarded very much as a back up source of power.

Assuming the fix is made within the minimum 24 hours, it is estimated the pit stop will cost Neutrogena an additional 40 hours or between 350 and 400 miles of extra distance sailed compared with the direct route if they had carried on. Their target will be to leave ahead of third placed GAES Centros Auditivos, who were 1100 miles behind when Altadill and Munoz diverted around 0300hrs this morning.

The race leaders Stamm and Le Cam commented:"The current conditions are very tough and it is difficult to imagine continuing with serious problems like those that Guillermo and José are experiencing. The Pacific Ocean is huge. There really is a minimum requirement to be able to sail safely. If you don't have any power, that is not the case. I know that full well and I can tell you that Auckland Island isn't really the ideal place to carry out a pit stop. It must have been hard for them to come to this decision, but it is clearly the right one. We're really sorry for them, but there's still a long way to go and we know how determined the Neutrogena crew is. We can be certain that they will get back in the race raring to go, once they have solved their problem. We wish them all the best for the coming hours as they make their way to New Zealand."

Stamm, in particular, knows to his cost the problems associated with trying to make repairs at Auckland Island, one of the options Altadill mooted. Faced with a battery charging issue during the last Vendée Globe he stopped there and inadvertantly received mooring assistance which disqualified him from the solo non stop race which has strict rules disallowing outside help.

The Cheminées Poujoulat duo passed the theoretical midpoint of the race at 0021hrs this morning, 11,720 miles from the start and the finish. They crossed the longitude of New Zealand's South Island today making 19kts.

The misfortune of the second placed boat in turn ignites hopes for third placed Anna Corbella and Gerard Marin that they might get much closer to Neutrogena. The Spanish pair were making SE parallel to the exclusion zone at around 16kts. A spectacular double rainbow proved a welcome moment of wonder in the deep south for Corbella and Marín.

Sixth placed round the world rookies Aleix Gelabert an d Didac Costa on One Planet One Ocean were preparing for their biggest winds forecast yet for tonight, with 50-55kts gusts expected, while on Spirit of Hungary, Nandor Fa and Conrad Colman in seventh had a scare Tuesday when they hit a unidentified floating object. A composite repair was required to the rudder tie bar, but the Hungarian flagged IMOCA 60 is back up to speed today.

Aleix Gelabert (ESP) One Planet One Ocean:" Now we have 20kts of wind from the west. And for the next 24 hours we expect a low pressure will pass over us with an associated cold front and we expect that tonight will be a difficult night with winds to 40kts, maybe gusts to 50-55kts, depending. So now we are resting and waiting, resting and preparing the boat for these weather conditions in the next hours.We feel safe sailing in the north of the exclusion zone. We know that Marcel and Race Management have been working a lot of time about the ice limit to be safe. If it is possible there are some growlers coming out of the exclusion zone, we had a warning last night from race management about this situation, that there may be a possible growlers in our route and so we changed our course a little bit just in case. There is no need to put ourselves at any additional risk. We are in contact with race management and are very confident about this. There is no problem.

Our boat is a 14 years old boat which is a bit different in design from the new boats. If I could I would make the back of the cockpit open so that when you have a lot of water it goes out easily. I would make a roof as well which would allow us to drive without being wet and without feeling the freezing winds out of the south west. That is a dream for us. But here we are with our coachroof and so we dont think about it.We are thinking of Cape Leeuwin, yes, but it is four or five days away for us. It is very important to get to our second big Cape of the race, and it will be an honour to get there, and it will be a big day. And then Cape Horn is the next one!"